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Kerry’s heart stopped. Then a hand gripped her ankle and she surged upward in shock, her head breaking the surface as her lungs inflated and a scream emerged.

Dar broke the surface next to her and grabbed hold of her arm.

“Ker!” She held her other hand up to block the light from the boat.

“Let’s get outta here!”

Kerry reached out and touched Dar’s face, ignoring everything else.

Dar gave a faint smile. “C’mon.” She started for the Dixie, fighting through the waves and rain, keeping hold of Kerry with one hand.

Buoyed by Dar’s presence, Kerry felt as if the waves now gently cradled her, ushering her toward safety in a world turned right way up and blessed, and full—for her—of God’s grace. Even the thunder sounded like laughter in her ears.

“CAREFUL.” ANDREW MANAGED to get a hand on the dive ladder as the Dixie wallowed in the waves. He got a foot on the bottom rung just as the stern of the boat lifted up out of the water, Terrors of the High Seas 321

taking him with it and nearly sending him flying off into the engine wash. “Jesus.”

Bud was on the other end of the wall, battered face swollen and still bleeding. He leaned over and extended a hand. “Grab on!”

Andy did so without hesitation, being pulled from the water and rolling up onto the deck as Bud hauled backwards, only to come back up onto his knees and immediately head back to the ladder. “Dar!”

“Holy shit.” Bud had tied a rope off to the deck railing and now he tossed it into the water, where two heads could be seen appearing and disappearing in the waves. “I left the Navy ’cause I didn’t want to do this shit no more.”

Andrew muffled a snort of laughter. “Tell me ’bout it.” He held on to the side of the boat and anxiously watched his daughters catch hold of the rescue rope. “Spent more tahm with mah ass in alligators after Ah signed them discharge papers than before.”

“Bud!” Charlie yelled down from the bridge. “We got waves coming in; we’re gonna swamp!” He gave the diesels a little gas, sliding the stern sideways.

“Get them engines in idle!” Andy roared back. “Hold it! They ain’t got no tow!”

Dar now had both hands on the rope, and Kerry had both arms around Dar, relying on the taller woman’s strength to pull them toward the boat.

“Help me pull ’em in.” Bud started hauling in the line.

“C’mere, useless! Get your hands on the rope!” he yelled at Bob, who had, to his credit, been anxiously hovering, unsure of what to do.

“I got it!” Bob took hold of the rope and pulled, almost losing his balance as the waves rolled the boat in a half circle. “Shit!”

The stern of the boat rose and fell, slamming the dive ladder into the water, nearly hitting Dar in the head. Stopping her forward progress just in time to miss being struck, she released the rope at the last second, then grabbed the ladder.

“Oh, she ain’t never gonna be able to… Jesus!” Andy scrambled for the ladder, lunging half off the back deck as the stern came up again, pulling both women with it. He grabbed for Dar’s shirt.

“Le—”

“I got it!” Dar yelled back, her biceps curled into stark muscularity as she held both of them up against the pressure. “Get out of the way!” she gasped, scrambling to get a foot on the lower rung as the bow rose and the stern plunged back down into the water.

Kerry just hung on as tightly as she could. She considered releasing her grip to grab the ladder, but the thought of falling backwards into the sea alone just… She couldn’t.

322 Melissa Good Dar got both feet on the ladder and waited, feeling the rear start to rise again. “Get ready, we’re coming in!” she screamed, lunging forward as the ladder lifted under them and pitched them almost right into the back of the boat.

Hands grabbed them and held them as Andy slammed back the hatch and hauled on the line. “Go! Go! Go!” he hollered. “Git, Charlie!”

The engines roared to full power in an instant, and the boat went from a wallowing helplessness into an almost painful arc.

“Hang on!” Charlie bellowed. “Going head in!”

Ahead of the boat, a monster wave rose, higher than the bridge as they plowed into it. Andy and Bud both dove for the deck, covering Dar and Kerry with their bodies and wrapping hands, arms, and legs around anything that might possibly hold.

“Holy Mother,” Bud grunted, as the wave crashed over the boat, drenching them in a freight-train carload of cold seawater. He looked up to see the cabin door slamming behind Bob’s retreating form. “Piss head.”

The back drains swirled, and then they were out of it, and the Dixie was plunging into the next wave, engines howling.

Kerry could feel the motion, but with Dar wrapped around her and the two ex-sailors covering them, she couldn’t see anything.

Maybe that was for the best. She pressed her cheek against Dar’s shoulder, breathing air full of salt and tasting it on the back of her tongue. Every inch of her hurt on the outside, but on the inside, all she felt was gratitude and a sense of relief as profound as death would have been. Another wave of seawater drenched her and she held her breath as it swirled around her body and Dar’s, before it drained out the back openings.

“Ker?”

Her throat hurt too much to talk, so she gave Dar a kiss on the neck to show she was listening.

“You okay?”

Kerry nodded, knowing Dar could feel the motion.

“Uuuggghhhhh!” Dar exhaled raggedly.

Kerry felt the boat shifting again, and she hugged Dar all the more tightly as cold water blasted over them and they pitched up so high in the front she felt herself being pressed against the rear wall of the deck.

“Shit!” Bud rasped, loudly enough for them to hear over the storm. “We’re goin’ over!”

Oh God. Kerry started to panic, trapped as she was under all of them and thinking of the tons of water about to roll over her as well as the huge yacht.

“No, we ain’t!” Andrew hollered back. “Git your hand back down on there and watch your mouth!”

Terrors of the High Seas 323

“Dar!” Kerry rasped, trying to squirm around and get a better grip on the boat’s hardware.

“Shh.” Dar got an arm around her just as the ship heeled over to the left and they all almost went flying to the other side of the deck. “Just hang on.”

The Dixie’s horn sounded, loud and brassy to counter the howl of the wind, and they felt the engines go to full power, the boat bucking the waves as it headed into the wind. Dar lifted her head and shook the hair from her eyes, squinting into the driving rain as lightning cracked overhead and etched a picture of what was happening deep into her awareness: high seas; the Dixie crawling up the front side of a wave easily fifty feet high; screams; DeSalliers’ boat cracking in half as the sea twisted it; darkness.

“Hang on!” Her father grabbed her by the back of the shirt and wrapped the fabric into his fist, tightening it across her chest.

“Jesus!”

Dar locked her legs around one of the deck supports and grabbed a cleat with one hand, wrapping her other arm around Kerry. The Dixie almost went to vertical, and she knew a stark moment of terror as she thought the boat was going to flip and bury them under it. They seemed to hang in the air for an eternity, before the bow turned slightly to one side and the engines gunned, and then they were cresting the wave instead, topping it and plummeting down the other side at a frightening speed.